US Represented

Kevin Arnold

Kevin Arnold attended the University of Wisconsin as a Midshipman on a NROTC Scholarship. Upon graduation, he was commissioned and served as the Legal Officer on USS Columbus, CG12 and as Officer-in-Charge of USS Prowess, IX-305. He was selected for promotion to Lieutenant (the equivalent of an Army Captain) but separated at the end of the Vietnam era as a LTJG. He has published fifty stories and poems in literary magazines such as Seattle Review and Beloit Fiction Journal, and US Represented. He learned several elements of craft in an extraordinary week in Raymond Carver’s workshop at Centrum. Serving as President, Poetry Center San Jose from 2001-2013, he earned his MFA from San Jose State University in 2007 as well as help start Gold Rush Writers, in the California foothills, where he has taught since 2007. The San Francisco / Peninsula California Writer's Club recently named him Writer of the Year. Recent books include a novel, The Sureness of Horses, and a book of poems titled Do Not Think Badly of Me. He’s currently working on a follow-on novel, Palo Alto Joy Ride and has taken a recent interest in the villanelle.

The Sureness of Horses, Chapters 17, 18, and 19

Summary of Previous Chapters 17 I didn’t like to think about why I’d waited decades to return to Barrington. My mother abused prescription drugs and alcohol and Dad had a hard time keeping a job—could high school have been anything I was eager to revisit? Leaving from the airport in San Francisco, I scribbled down […]

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Kevin’s Favorite Poems, “Requiem,” Four More Gravestone Poems, “Gravy”

This is part of a series of columns that feature a much-loved poem, and other poems that speaks to, or resonate with, the first poem. This week’s poem is “Requiem,” written by Robert Louis Stevenson. This poem was carved into Stevenson’s gravestone. The line that attracted me was “Glad did I live and gladly die.” Some critics consider

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Kevin’s Much-Loved Poems: “Oatmeal” by Galway Kinnell

This is the eighth in a series of columns that feature a much-loved poem and a second poem that speaks to, or resonates with, that poem. This week’s poem is “Oatmeal,” written by Galway Kinnell in the late 1980s. Kinnell was Poet Laureate of Vermont from 1989 to 1993 and a Nobel prizewinner. A follower

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Kevin’s Much-Loved Poems: “Lament,” “Holy Sonnet 10,” and “The Sick Rose.”

This continues the series of columns that highlight a much-loved poem and presents other poems that speak to, or resonate with, that poem. In this column I’m reacting to a nearby tragedy. A poet friend of mine has lost her husband in a bicycling accident, leaving her to finish raising two girls on her own. Because

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Kevin’s Much-Loved Poems: “The Lanyard” by Billy Collins

I’d previously excluded “The Lanyard” from these columns because of its length–it’s considerably longer than most of the poems I’ve included. But I was recently asked to read at a birthday party from a thankful daughter, and, after searching widely, I found and read one of my already-most-loved poems. It was so well received I’m giving it a column

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